water footprint and neutrality€¦ · general mills • 5-year goal to reduce water use by 5% ......
TRANSCRIPT
WATER FOOTPRINT AND NEUTRALITY:
CHALLENGES & OPPORTUNITIES
April 13, 2012
Presented at WaterTech, Banff, AB
Francisco A. Perello, PhD, P.Eng.
Table of Content
• Introduction
• Definitions
• Market Trends
• From Concept to Implementation
• Project Review
Global water use increasing at 2.4x population growth rate.
Over 1 B people w/o clean drinking water.
Over 2 B people w/o adequate sanitation.
Over 5 M deaths annually from preventable waterborne diseases.
97.5% salt water; 1.5% frozen fresh water
Fresh water use: 70% irrigation; 22% industry; 8% domestic use.
THINKING GLOBALLY
How much water
is consumed in a country?
Benchmark of
National Water Footprints
Country m3 / yr / capita Comments
Global 1,385 = 380 L/d/cap
Country m3 / yr / capita Comments
Global 1,385 = 380 L/d/cap
China 700 7% external
Water-rich South vs
Food-rich North
India 980 2% external
Indonesia 1,317 ~10% external
Country m3 / yr / capita Comments
Global 1,385 = 380 L/d/cap
China 700 7% external
Water-rich South vs
Food-rich North
India 980 2% external
Indonesia 1,317 ~10% external
UK 1,750 97% external
Germany 1,940 Mainly a water importer
Spain 2,000 Water importer for agricultural
products
Water exporter for livestock
Netherlands 2,300 89% external
Country m3 / yr / capita Comments
Global 1,385 = 380 L/d/cap
China 700 7% external
Water-rich South vs
Food-rich North
India 980 2% external
Indonesia 1,317 ~10% external
UK 1,750 97% external
Germany 1,940 Mainly a water importer
Spain 2,000 Water importer for agricultural
products
Water exporter for livestock
Netherlands 2,300 89% external
Canada 2,333 21% external
How much water is needed to
make a commercial product?
18,000x its weight
*30L for one cup of tea
Definitions
Water Footprint of a Business (Product) • Total volume of fresh water used directly or
indirectly to run and support a business (or to produce a product)
• Includes blue, green and grey water
Water Neutrality of a Business (Product) • Reducing water footprint as much as reasonably
possible and offsetting remaining negative externalities
• It doesn’t mean water use is zero
Market Trends
1 in 5 consumers is sustainability-driven
in brand and store choice.
Water efficiency is a sustainability component.
What are the trends?
Market Trends
General Mills
• 5-year goal to reduce water use by 5%
Coca-Cola
• Began reporting water issues as a material risk to
investors
• System-wide goal of returning all water used back
to nature
Market Trends
Anheuser-Busch
• Currently 5.5 L of water per L of beer packaged.
• Goal is 4 to 1.
• Decreased water usage by 37% since 2000.
• One plant reduced its water ratio to 4.3
Cadbury (now Kraft Foods)
• Goal to reduce water usage by 20% by 2020
Market Trends
Colgate - Palmolive:
• Their 2002 to 2010 target was to reduce water use
by 25% and attain a 40% reduction of water use per
unit of production worldwide.
ConAgra Foods:
• In April 2010 announced a goal to reduce water use
by 15 percent per pound of product produced by
2015.
Market Trends
Who’s the leader?
Project Summary
Client is a Food Processor located in the Lower Mainland
Engaged us during $8 million plant expansion
Plant has dedicated flow meters
Flow readings every 15 minutes
287 flow data points per day
105,000 data points per year
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM 12:00:00 AM
What does it mean?
How can it be used for projecting
water use after plant expansion?
Permit Max Instantaneous Flow
Cleaning Hours Production Hours
Typical Daily Effluent Flow with Original Permit Levels
25 m3/d
Sanitation
64 m3/d
4.5 lps (Max)
Pre-expansion flow
rates
128 m3/d 96 m3/d
8.9 lps (Max)
Post-expansion
Estimates
Pasta
Line 1
Pasta
Line 2
• A water balance was completed for the plant.
• Flow spikes during sanitation attributed to
– Draining of multiple kettles
– Draining of CIP tanks during short period of time
Total
89 m3/d
4.5 lps
136 m3/d
12.1 lps
Production
Identified Opportunities
Best practices implemented
Operator’s education/awareness
Lower volume nozzles for the CIP system
Ingredients in bags rather than pails
=> reducing water for cleaning
Holding tank for kettle discharge
=> slow bleed back into system
High pressure hoses
RESULTS
reduced peak flows & total water consumption
Pasta
Line 1
Pasta
Line 2
40 m3/d
69 m3/d
4.5 lps (Max)
Post-expansion
Estimates w/ Water
Saving Measures and
Water Management
Practices
25 m3/d
Total Sanitation
64 m3/d
4.5 lps
128 m3/d
96 m3/d
8.9 lps (Max)
Pre-expansion flow
rates
Post-expansion
Estimates
Total
89 m3/d
4.5 lps
224 m3/d
12 lps
109 m3/d
4.5 lps
Production
ACTING LOCALLY
• Determine Water Footprint
– own operation and supply-chain
– batch, continuous, seasonal
– water balance for all unit processes
• Reduce Water Footprint
– identify opportunities
– to reduce consumption and generation
• Plan Water Neutrality
– Reduce as much as possible internally and externally
– Offset at local watershed level
• Operate Water Neutral
THANK YOU !!
www.KeystoneEnvironmental.ca
Francisco A. Perello
604-430-0671